The Effect of Inhalation of Aromatherapy Blend containing Lavender Essential Oil on Cesarean Postoperative Pain

Author(s):
Alireza OlapourAlireza Olapour1, Kaveh BehaeenKaveh Behaeen1, Reza AkhondzadehReza Akhondzadeh1, Farhad SoltaniFarhad Soltani1, Forough al Sadat RazaviForough al Sadat Razavi1,*, Reza BekhradiReza Bekhradi2
1Department of Anesthesiology, Golestan Hospital, Ahvaz Jundishapur University of Medical Sciences, Ahvaz, Iran
2Barij Essence Research and Development Centre, Kashan, Iran

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine:Vol. 3, issue 1; 203-7
Published online:Jun 30, 2013
Article type:Research Article
Received:Dec 21, 2012
Accepted:Jan 25, 2013
How to Cite:Olapour A, Behaeen K, Akhondzadeh R, Soltani F, al Sadat Razavi F, et al. The Effect of Inhalation of Aromatherapy Blend containing Lavender Essential Oil on Cesarean Postoperative Pain. Anesth Pain Med. 2013;3(1):. doi: https://doi.org/10.5812/aapm.9570

Abstract

Background:

Pain is a major problem in patients after cesarean and medication such as aromatherapy which is a complementary therapy, in which the essences of the plants oils are used to reduce such undesirable conditions.

Objectives:

In this study, the effect of aromatherapy using Lavender (Lavandula) essential oil on cesarean postoperative pain was assessed.

Materials and Methods:

In a triple blind, randomized placebo-controlled trial study, 60 pregnant women who were admitted to a general hospital for cesarean section, were divided randomly into two groups. After cesarean, the Lavender group inhaled about 3 drops of 10% Lavender oil essence and the placebo group inhaled 3 drops of placebo after the start of postoperative pain, four, eight and 12 hours later, for 5 minutes from the 10 cm distance. Patient\'s pain was measured by the VAS (Visual Analog Scale) score before and after each intervention, and vital sign, complications and level of satisfaction of every patient were recorded before and after aromatherapy.

Results:

There was no statistically significant difference between groups in age, height, weight, and time to the first analgesic requirement. Patients in the Lavender group had less postoperative pain in four (P = 0.008), eight (P = 0.024) and 12 (P = 0.011) hours after first medication than the placebo group. The decreased heart rate and patients\' level of satisfaction with analgesia were significantly higher in the Lavender group (P = 0.001). In the placebo group, the use of diclofenac suppositories for complete analgesia was also significantly higher than the Lavender group (P = 0.008).

Conclusions:

The inhaled Lavender essence may be used as a part of the multidisciplinary treatment of pain after cesarean section, but it is not recommended as the sole pain management.

Full Text

Full text is available in PDF

Similar Articles

31
Oct
2014

Effects of Inhalation of Lavender Essential Oil on Open-heart Surgery Pain

Armaiti Salamati,
Soheyla Mashouf,
Faezeh Sahbaei,
Faraz Mojab
28
Sep
2017

Pain control with lavender essential oil

Neda Hoseini Abforosh,
Mohamad Reza Asgari,
Ali Ghods
6
Jan
2016

The Effects of Inhalation of Aromatherapy with Lavender on Anxiety Amongst Patients Undergoing Colonoscopy

Marzieh Mogharab,
Kazem Ayoubzadeh,
Seyed Mousal Reza Hosseini,
Gholamreza Sharifzadeh
13
Sep
2016

The Effect of Aromatherapy with Lavender Essential Oil on Anxiety and Stress in Patients Undergoing Coronary Artery Bypass Graft Surgery

Nahid Rajai,
Seyedeh Azam Sajadi,
Fatemeh Teymouri,
Armin Zareiyan,
Saeed Siavoshi,
Mahdi Malmir

Crossmark
Crossmark
Checking
Share on
Cited by
Metrics

Ordering Reprints

Articles are published under the Creative Commons license stated on each article. No permission or royalty fee is required for uses permitted by that license. CCC handles optional bulk and customized reprint orders. Any quotation covers production and delivery services only, not copyright permission. > Request Reprints from CCC 

Search Relations

Author(s):

Related Articles